On December 16, 2022, the US Department of State’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (“DDTC”) issued a proposed rule that would treat two additional types of transactions as activities that are not exports, reexports, retransfers, or temporary imports (“controlled events”) (and, thus, not require authorization) under the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (“ITAR”).  The two additional activities that would not constitute controlled events are:

  • Taking defense articles outside a previously approved country by the armed forces of a foreign government or United Nations personnel on a deployment or training exercise, provided (i) the defense article is transported by and remains in the possession of the armed forces of a foreign government or United Nations personnel, and (ii) there is no change in end-use or end-user with respect to the subject defense article; and
  • Further reexports or retransfers of foreign defense articles that were previously imported into the United States and then subsequently exported from the United States pursuant to an ITAR license or other approval, provided (i) the foreign defense article was not modified, enhanced, upgraded, or otherwise altered or improved in a manner that changed the basic performance of the article prior to its return to the country from which it was imported or a third country, and (ii) a US-origin defense article was not incorporated into the foreign defense article.

DDTC stated in the proposed rule that while not previously specified in the ITAR, its long-standing policy is that these two activities are not controlled events.  DDTC is accepting comments on the proposed rule until February 14, 2023 here.

Author

Paul Amberg is a partner in Baker McKenzie’s Madrid office, where he handles international trade and compliance issues. He advises multinational companies on export controls, trade sanctions, antiboycott rules, customs laws, anticorruption laws, and commercial law matters. Paul helps clients assess and address compliance risks presented by export controls, trade sanctions, antiboycott rules, customs laws, and anticorruption laws. His practice especially focuses on internal reviews, voluntary disclosure filings, and enforcement actions brought by, the US Government in relation to the Export Administration Regulations (EAR), International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), trade and economic sanctions programs, and US customs laws.

Author

Eunkyung advices clients on various regulatory compliance and trade issues, concentrating on the US export controls such as the Export Administration Regulations (EAR) and International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR), economic and trade sanctions, US customs and import laws, the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), and foreign anti-bribery laws.

Author

Daniel’s practice focuses on US economic and trade sanctions, including those targeting Iran, Russia, Cuba, Syria, and North Korea, export controls, and anti-boycott laws. He represents clients in national security reviews before the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), and has experience in federal court litigation and congressional investigations. His pro bono practice includes providing sanctions and export control advice to a global humanitarian NGO.